Saturday, June 27, 2026

How to Read a Book by Monica Wood

How to Read a Book by Monica Wood is a lovely novel that tells the interwoven stories of Violet Powell, Harriet Larson, and Frank Daigle. Powell is a twenty-two-year old released from prison after a drunk driving crash that kills a local teacher. Larson is a retired English teacher who leads the prison book club which Powell was a part of. Frank is a retired machinist who was married to the woman killed in the car crash.

The jacket notes it a hopeful story about letting go of guilt, seizing second chances, and the power of books to change our lives. When the women at book club, they've they’re not just the crimes that put them in jail. Every week they would start by saying, “I am a reader. I am intelligent, I have something worthy to contribute.”

Violet, Harriet, and Frank meet in a bookstore in Portland, Maine. Violet was buying the novel she was reading in prison book club when released. Harriet choosing the next title for the club to read, and Frank working as the handyman at the store. Violet and Harriet were surprised to see each other and Frank and Violet shocked at meeting. Violet felt an overwhelming guilt about her crime, and Frank as well felt bad about scaring Violet with his reaction to seeing her in the store. Forgiveness is a thread that runs through the book and in fairly short order, the three became friends.

It comes out that Frank’s late wife Lorraine was planning on leaving him prior to the accident, and had told their daughter Kristy that Frank having an affair, not the opposite which was true. Harriet gets Violet a job as a lab assistant at the university, working with Dr. Petrov, an animal behaviorist who studies the intelligence of birds, parrots Bob, Alan, Oliver, and Charlotte, all able to speak and understand English. Then fellow book club member Dawna-Lynn escaped from prison and came to Harriet's house, while she, Violet, and Frank there. It's a fun and a lovely book, with people who care for one another, and has a nice postscript about their later lives.